The C++ language has gone through several revisions, in particular C++98, C++03, C++11, C++14, C++17, and C++20, and there are tags for each of these versions (c++98, c++03, c++11, c++14, c++17, and c++20, respectively).
As far as I can tell, there is no reason to ever use one of these version tags for a question without c++ applying to it as well. In fact, each of the language version wikis say to use c++ in addition to the version tag.
Despite this, many such posts are not tagged with c++, and at the moment there are about 8,000 of them. These are only the currently incorrectly tagged questions, but there are many that are corrected daily by watchers of the language version tags.
There are a number of issues I see with this, in decreasing order of importance:
There aren't many watchers of version specific tags, and as a result, many good quality questions simply don't get the attention they deserve.
A fair amount of energy is expended on retagging such posts, usually by watchers of the language version tags. If I had to make a rough guess, on average I personally add c++ to about half a dozen such questions every day, and I'm aware of other users who do this quite a lot as well.
Duplicates that are incorrectly tagged can't be closed by gold tag badge holders if they add c++ themselves. This dilutes the effectiveness of the duplicate-hammer, and there aren't as many gold tag badge holders as one would ideally like, and so obvious duplicates can go hours, if not longer, without being closed.
One potential concern is the limit of five tags that can be added to a question. In practice, I haven't found this to be much of an issue, since usually at least one of the other tags is incorrect, or redundant.
Is it a good idea to make c++ be automatically added to any post with a language version tag? Perhaps the OP could be asked to remove one of the other tags if they already have five, or the limit could be waived when a combination of these tags is used.
I can't see any downside to this approach, other than it being potentially difficult to implement (I can't speak to that).